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FRESHMEN TO VIE IN FALL ELECTION
(See Column One)
PAGE THREE USC Cambridge Scholars Criticize Courses 1 ■ g\ University of Southern California lILY • TROJA1 PAGE FOUR Surprise Team - Stanford Analyzed by Writer
VOL. LIV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1962 NO. 13
305 Students Make Deans List
Total Increases 66 Over 1961; 53 Earn Perfect Grade Scores As Warren Lauds Top Scholars
FALL ELECTIONS
Nineteen Trojans To Seek Offices
Voting for fall elections will be held today and tomorrow from 9 to 4 in Alumni Memo rial Park in front of Doheny Library, Election Commissioner Dick Messer said yesterday.
Students will be voting on freshman class president, vice president and AWS representative and biological sciences senator.
Photo ID Cards
Messer asked voters to have fee bills and photo identification cards with them when they enter the polls. He said voters must be able to prove their fields of study and their class status.
The election commissioner said ballots would be locked up during the night in the special events office. He said they would not be counted until polls closed tomorrow. Results will
Psychologist Will Speak
Dr. Leo F. Cain, psychologist and president of South Bay State College, will speak on the effects of special programs in the development of mentally retarded children today at noon at a Faculty Center luncheon.
Dr. Cain holds a general secondary and general elementary credentials, the general school administration credential, the school psychologists’ credential and is certified by the California Board of Medical Examiners as a psychologist.
be announced at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Senate Cham bers, 301 SU.
Nineteen candidates who officially petitioned for office remain in the election. In addition. one student — freshman Mick Mills — has announced himself as a write-in candidate for freshman class president.
Messer explained that write-ins may run for any offices, but that their names must be spelled correctly on ballots.
In other election activities yesterday, Steve Meiers, president of the University Students Party (USP), said no political pressure had been applied to candidates in the elections by his party.
Candidates
Monday three candidates for Freshman Class president dropped from the race in favor of write-in candidate Mills because, they said, they felt political parties were being forced up on them.
Meiers said he contacted two of the students yesterday to ask if they had received pressure from USP.
He said both students said they had not been pressured by any party.
The USP president, commenting on Trojans for Representative Government (TRG) party's announcement yesterday of an open caucus, said his party would protest the elections if TRG came out backing candidates.
He maintained that TRG had lost recognition last semester and could not legitimately enter the campaigns.
Three hundred five outstanding students in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences were named to the Dean’s List for the 1962 spring semester.
Ernestine Lindahl, Susan Hart-j man Beecher Cox, Raymond Judith Jo Luebke Robert
ford McBurney, Linda Lee Me- Charles Cox, Richard A. Cox, James McCarthy, Wendell Je-
Mahan, James Mitchell Mann, T________ T____„
„ ’James Jerome Crisp, William rome McCorvey, Eileen Louise Richard Reade Mayer, Karen
Lorraine Maxwell, Steven Alan|Stephen Croddy- Frank Turner McDonagh, Kenneth Charles
The total is 66 more than the Meiers, Anthony George Merz- Curry. Donald Lee Dear and McKenzie, Raymond Ralph Mo-
previous semester’s 239. Fifty- lak, Robert Maclav Oates Jr., Edwin Moffit DeLaix. Kinley, Patricia Tylene Mo-
three of the 305 listed acquired Adah Gail O’Conner, Judy Lee ... D- - r , Neill, Richard Deffner Macum-
a perfect 4.0 grade point aver- Rees and Mary Elizabeth Rich- ' • .. t -\t i
aeV The lareest number of ards Dixon- Richard Sherwood^ Mlchael James Maloney,
age. me largest numDer or aras. . Stephanie Lou Manong, Mari-
students on the list were from Peggy Elaine Robbins, Carol t Dodge,Harold A. Drake, Mama Mangold Charles C
+K“ Ernest Rydingsword, Edward Gail Drumm, David Carl Dryer, Marson, Lynda ^ Martinez!
Sowers Schweizer, Marjorie Donna Marie Duffy .John Rus-i Gary Michael Mills, Randall
Elaine Shock, Rosemaij The- ^ j>uncan an(j Maurice Dusol Bruce Monsen, Alfredo O. Mo-
the English department.
Moves Forward
“As the University moves forward on its Master Plc*n for rese Smith, Steven Lee Spiegel,
Enterprise and Excellence in;Diane Adell Vedder, Janet Ro- ^r*
Education, we expect our slu- chelle Weiner. Susan R. Winer, j dents to be increasingly chal-1 Rosalie Wolf and Matthew! lenged,” said Dr. Neil D. War-1 Wong.
ren, dean of Letters, Arts and| Those students whqse grade-Sciences. “We congratulate!points fell between 3.5 and 3.9
those whose records show they j made up the remainder of the;5011, Lawrence Raymond Emme,
have met the challenge.” Dean’s List. The following stu- Barbara Dale Epstein, Carol ___
Students named to the list dents were in this category: Ann Erickson and Dariel Abra- <fpnhln K»r v
, . | . „ ham Farkas I Nelson, Stephen Kenney Nen-
achieved a 3.5 grade point av- A-B , am a kas. ^ Phyllis Nicholson. David
erage during the spring semes-1 Barbara Ann Adams, Eunice Melinda E Fee Stephen Marshall Norcott, David Nov-
ter while carrying 12 or more C. Adelman, Man-Ann Aki- paul Feldman Pearl Elizabeth
ros, Nancy Maelee Nuessler,
yama, ^eneA joyce_ ^ Ferguson, Helmut Fischer, Leslie Ann Olsen. Judith Lynne
rales. Marian Alice Morisse, jt_|t Joan Carol Motta. Philip
Thomas Stephen Eastman, Michael Mottola, Glen Freeman Joni Gayle Eder, James Stew- Mowrer Jr., Sandra Jane art Edwards. Susan Clementine Myers and Pamela Ethel My-Elliot, Bettye Holmes Elli- r'ck-
N-O
Johnny Nalbandian, Patricia
CAMPUS ROUNDUP
Administrator to See Inauguration at Rice
Tom Nickell, vice president for university planning, was scheduled to represent the university today in Houston. Tex., at the inauguration of Dr. Kenneth Sanborn Pitzer as the third president of Rice University.
The inauguration is being held on the 50th anniversary of Rice University, which was
has personally planned for his passing to what he hopes will be a .“higher place” during a talk tonight at 6 at Wesley Foundation, 817 W. 34th St.
Dr. Robert Mannes, professor of mechanical engineering, will deliver his “Last Lecture’’ following an informal Wesley
Daily Trojan Photo CAMPAIGNING — Candidate for state treasurer, John A. Busterud, gets off his "campaign wagon" to greet TYR President Harvey Harris and other members of the political club. He urged students to become interested in political activities both off and on campus.
Assemblyman Urges Political Participation
units.
Perfect Scholars Those students with 4-point grade averages were:
Mary E. Anderson, Richard j
Anita J. Flesch, William Penn Ostrow and Margaret Kathleen
founded in 1912 by William supper at 5 p.m.
Marsh Rice. An academic fes-| Mannes is the director of tival. including speeds by ^ Trojan ^ visiting scholars, will be held through Friday.
ship program.
Membership in campus political organizations is beneficial to students because it keeps them politically inform ed, Assemblyman Jo h n A. Busterud said yesterday at Trojan Young Republicans (TYR) meeting.
Busterud. the Republican candidate for state treasurer, commended TYR members for their work in the state campaign and urged students to join political clubs, whether Republican, Democrat or otherwise.
Turning to the present campaigns, Busterud said a lack of responsibility is evident in Gov. Edmund G. Brown's administration. He said a surplus had existed at the end of Brown’s first year in office.
"Brown’s administration called for a $2.3 million budget, and at the end of the fiscal year, there was S1.3 as a surplus,” Busterud said.
Busterud claimed that the surplus w as a bad influence be-
cause of the temptation it offered to special interest groups in California.
Turning to his own campaign, he told TYR members that the treasurer’s duties as stated in the California Con stitution . are largely unde fined. He said the treasurer should serve as “a guardian of our state’s credit.”
He said the Brown administration had not benefited California’s credit rating. He defined the Brown concept of balancing the budget as adding state revenue to government borrowing.
Concerning fiscal responsibility, Busterud said incumbent Bert Betts, his opponent, is only a small town accountant.
“The treasurer should not be an accountant, but an economist,” he said.
He said Betts was responsibly for a $7 million cut in the current budget.
Charles Anderson. Robert ajp Jack Forem Norvene,0wen.
Marie Angelica. Kathleen Fran- Kay Foster Krisüne Mary p.Q
Ingrid Altman, Jen Ho Bargees Archer. Hazel Sachiko An- Fre)burg and gusan ^ Fried_ Danie, Dewi 11 Palmerlee. rett, Judith Irene Barrett,| mizu, R. Padmatatmim Astra- man Judith Anm> Parker RonaW
Wendie Ann Beasley, Suzette! diningrat, Walter Lee Atwell, Q H paul patterson william S.
Bempechat, Ronald Anthony j Burton Herbert Baker and H.
Carter, Sandra Elizabeth Cav-i Dennis Barr.
agnaro, Hedy Kay Davis, Judith Irene Barrett, , classman, Jon David Glass-j Lewis C. Pollanl Jr.
Pamela Glee Dutcher, Barry j Cary Garry, Elaine Beverly |
R-S
Blythe A. Rainey, Betty Jo
Suey Teng Bob Gee, Robert Pine, Peter Linn Plagens. Joseph George. Anthony Mich- James Livingston Plummer and
i , .man, Kenneth Roy Godfrey,
Eben, Joan Ruth Edmonds, Jurii Bastedo, Wayne Richard Beh- Jacque,¡ne ßarbara Q^dberg,
Eenmaa, Robert Bruce Flaigilendorf, Patricia Virginia ^ Gordon
Behnke, John Irven Betinis.j
and William Toshio Futa.
Thelma Jane Gardner. John Stephen Glaser, Donald Steven Greenberg, Michael Alan Gu-hin, Robert Terry Hall, Lawrence Cameron Heiser, Harold
James Robert
Gregory, David Roberts Guil-!
Reading, Robert Ronald Rigg, Dona Perrin Roberts, Mike Von
Robert Lee Bish, Samuel E. , . . ., _ _,
_. . . „ , bert, Arthur Ray Hale and „ _ .. _ .
Bjorklund, Richard Comstock .. Haleblian Robinson. Robin Therese Rob-
Blackbum. Stephen Thomas inson, Terrance Benjamin Rod-
Blume, Gary R. Brooks, David Sharilyn Rae Hanson, Wil- sky. Peter J. Rosen, Susan
Michael Brown, Linda Jeannelliam Henry Harmon, James Marcia Rosenberg, Suzanne
J. Helbock, Russell Donald1 Brown and Margot A. Burgess.! Hedrick Harmon. Harvey E. Beth Rosenstock. Leon Benja-
Hicks, Philip Duane Holmes. C-D Harris, Genta Ann Hawkins, min Roth, Theresa Jurate Rud-
Nelson Thomas Horn, Donna Ruth Louise Caldwell, Judith! Judith Ann Haythrone, Stephen zevicius-Radys and Carolyn F.
Frances Kaiman, Alan David Kashare, Eugene Lee Ketchum and Caesar Sheperd Kersten.
Marilyn Kazuko Kurahashi, Robert John Legebvre, Nancy
Caltech President To Begin Lectures
Rita Calvert, Judith Ann Ca- M. Heilman, Kinniko Higasha, Russell.
pito, Ronald Anthony Carter. Don Scott Holden, David Mii-hael Sacker Setsuko
Joanne T. Casinelli, Laura Anne Fraser Holland. Elena Halle. lf* M^naei sacKer, seuuKo „ _ ' „ .. ! T - TI , . , *.. Helen Sakiyama, Sally B. Salis-
Conaton Barry Lynn Cotter. tx,ra,ne Gay Hnlnback. Uly ^
Maren Jane Courtney, Chap- May Hooper and Nancy Jane wluiam Sche„*. Susan
j Jane Scherer. John Robert Andrew Jackson Hosmer,!Schottland, Stephen Ixwre Lewis Eugene Hoyt, Sandra Schwartz. Victor Stuart Lee Hubbell, Alice Marie Hu-iSchwartz, Gladys Suzanne ber and Kathryn Adele Hughes. * Searle, Nancy May Seid, Toby J K Shalant, Sara Elisabeth Sheiry,
exnioration oro Linda Helen Johnson. Robert Barbara Dorothy Shell, Judie explorât,on ^ Joncs Barbara Ann Sh.ngl.ra».. Jo^ph Shky-
JJoalin. D. Ernest Jung. Arline Joan H«*“« **“ *nd
Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, presi- |U.S. space dent of the California Insti-lgram.
tute of Technology, will open Dr. DuBridge plans to ror-| John Victor Simpson.
relate the connections and sim- Ray Kaplan’ m H* K
a year-iong series of science lectures tonight at 8 in Hancock Auditorium, Dr. John S. Garth, a Hancock Foundation researcher, said yesterday.
Dr. DuBridge will speak on the way the sciences are working together for the present
Philosophical Club To Hold First Meet
The Philosophical Society will hold its first meeting of the semester today at 12:15 in Argonauts Hall in Mudd Hall. Joseph C. Flay, president of the society, announced yesterday.
The group will discuss election of new officers and activities for the semester.
“Membership in the society Js open to all students with an interest in philosophy,” Flay•! said. “There are no dues.’’
Student to Recount India Trip for Killel
The Hillel Foundation will hold an informal lunch today at noon at the foundation. 1029 W. 36th St.
The luncheon will host Arline Kaplan, Daily Trojan as-: sistant feature editor, as guest j speaker.
Miss Kaplan will discuss her adventures in India and other foreign count ires she visted while on an exchange trip to India this summer.
Professor to Read His ‘Last Words’
An engineering professor will read the p*ting statement he
British Teach Conviviality
ilar interests of scientists in the fields of geology, physics, astronomy, chemistry and biol
By PONCHITTA PIERCE Assistant to the Editor (This is the last of a three-part series of articles on the 28 USC students who spent one month at Cambridge University this summer.)
♦ + +
During their month’s stay at Cambridge University, the 28 traveling USC students learned as much about English students as they did about English education.
Whenever possible, they took advantage of opportunities to mix with students, attend their parties and go out with them. They soon discovered that Cambridge men and women, although engulfed in history, are ultramodern.
At parties and in the English homes, students shared the latest jazz sounds, twisted with unrestrained rhythm and got as much “spirit” as possible.
Many of the get-togethers made Trojans forget they were on foreign soil. The English host opened his door, sat down with his guests and spent hours either dancing to or being soothed by the current British favorites—Ray Charles, A1 Hirt, Dave Brubeck, Miles Davis and many others.
The USC students learned that local pubs or teahouses were still the centers for discussing world issues as they were In the 1700s. There was always something on which to throw out ideas— politics, Americanism, World War III, Common Market, Bertand Russell.
A highlight of these sessions were the Americans who are studying at Cambridge during regular terms. After two years of assimilation, most
of them were unrecognizable with their carefully designed beards, quickly acquired English accents and pungent pipes.
From their associations with Cambridge students and their friends, Trojans realized that the English were often more intellectually than socially mature.
An English mother offered one justification.
“In England, dear, we separate the sexes,” she said. “When our students begin secondary education around 11 years of age, the boys go one way and the girls another.”
Many of the schools attest to this—even Cambridge, where there are only three colleges for women but 18 for men.
“Living in” regulations were stiff at Cambridge for both men and women. The latest check in— without a signout—was 11 p.m. for some colleges and midnight for others. On Sundays, students had to be back by 11 p.m.
If a student returned to the gates one minute after they closed, he sometimes had to wait 20 to 30 minutes before the porter finished his “check” and came back to the door.
USC students who visited English homes felt that the parents, once the reserve was broken, were as friendly and congenial as their children, and were more than eager to make their guests feel at home.
By these close associations with the English students, Trojans learned that in many ways the land and sea that separate England from America are not as vast as they appear.
us, Setsuko Virginia Kilhara,j Alexander N. Sloan, Neal Susan Jeanne Kilroy, Sadac Ki- j stuart Smalley, Daniel Joseph
mura, Leonid Kishkovsky, Sue- smith, Michele Claire Smith,
ogy with'the experiments andiEllen Klein- Uana Kleiner Bruce Henry Spector. Joel Irv-
research being done in the John Arthur Kloetzel. Joanne ing standard. Barry Howard
Carol Knemeyer. Michael Alan; Steiner, Virginia Stephens, Jud-Kniss and Deanne Kathleen Ann Still, Lenore J. Strat-Koziol. ‘ton. Herbert G. Steger, Harold
Roger Stokes. Allen Ariel Marguerite Leann Lachman, gtone. Sandra Lee Stuhrman Alan Curtis Lask, Charles Ken-!ancj 3arbara jay Sutton, neth Layne. Stuart Lee, Boydj Sanford Lemon, Leslie Alan I
Leibovitch. Laura Mae Lind-1 James Mounsey Taggart, gren, Karen June Lindstedt, i ^e d Taylor, Michaei Ray David Gordon Lippman. Bar- Thorpe. R. D. Tingom. Tadao bara Jo Login. Vicki Jean Lu-i Tochioka. John Richard Tom-boff and Marvin Arnold Luck- hnson. William C. Tunberg and in (Continued on Page 2)
space program.
Monthly Series
Seven distinguished scientists are slated to appear in the monthly series, scheduled for ¡the second Wednesday of each month. The series will continue through April 10.
! According to Dr. Leslie A. 'Chamber, director of the Hancock Foundation, the lectures are designed to emphasize the interdisciplinary character of ¡modem scientific research.
¡ Following D r. DuBridge’s lecture, Dr. Herman Harvey.
| associate professor of psychology, will speak Nov. 14 on “Psychological Stress and Human Behavior.”
Third Speaker
The third speaker in the series will be Dr. Willard F. Libby, Nobel laureate and professor of chemistry at UCLA. His Dec. 12 lecture will be titled “Isotopic Dating.”
Herbert Friedmann, director of the Los Angeles County Museum, will lecture on “Honey-birds. Wax and Tuberculosis” Oct. 9.
Feb. 13 lecture topic Is “The Living Island: Convergence of Natural Sciences in the Tropi cal Coralline Atoll," by Dr. E. Yale Dawson, professor of biology.
Various other well-known scientists in many different fields also are expected to lecture in this monthly series.
Forum Will Hear Censorship Talk
James Durbin, instructor in a book is injurious to readers’
English, will discuss literary \ minds.
u- He explained that the court
censorship today at 12:05 at
must first determine tne dam-tht first meeting of the gradu- age -Tropic of Cancer” could ate student forum of the Pres- ^ rea(jers' minds before byterian-Episcopal Center, 854 they could determine if the
W. 36th St.
book is obscene.
Durbin, sponsored by Epis- ‘ We know what physical copal Chaplain Michael flamil- harm is, and we can measure ton and Presbyterian Chaplain1 ¡j, for our physical constitn-Charles Doak, will discuss cur- ,tions are similar,” he »aid. rent issues in the censorship! BUt do we know what injures controversy. ¡the mind? Do we feel so inse-
During the ‘Tropic of Can-:cure that we should be dis-cer” obscenity trial last year, turbed by anything that is like-Durbin defended author Henry ly to unsettle us?”
Miller s right to write the book The Rev. Mr. Hamilton said on the grounds that no one all graduate students are in-could determine whether such jvited to attend the discussion.

FRESHMEN TO VIE IN FALL ELECTION
(See Column One)
PAGE THREE USC Cambridge Scholars Criticize Courses 1 ■ g\ University of Southern California lILY • TROJA1 PAGE FOUR Surprise Team - Stanford Analyzed by Writer
VOL. LIV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1962 NO. 13
305 Students Make Deans List
Total Increases 66 Over 1961; 53 Earn Perfect Grade Scores As Warren Lauds Top Scholars
FALL ELECTIONS
Nineteen Trojans To Seek Offices
Voting for fall elections will be held today and tomorrow from 9 to 4 in Alumni Memo rial Park in front of Doheny Library, Election Commissioner Dick Messer said yesterday.
Students will be voting on freshman class president, vice president and AWS representative and biological sciences senator.
Photo ID Cards
Messer asked voters to have fee bills and photo identification cards with them when they enter the polls. He said voters must be able to prove their fields of study and their class status.
The election commissioner said ballots would be locked up during the night in the special events office. He said they would not be counted until polls closed tomorrow. Results will
Psychologist Will Speak
Dr. Leo F. Cain, psychologist and president of South Bay State College, will speak on the effects of special programs in the development of mentally retarded children today at noon at a Faculty Center luncheon.
Dr. Cain holds a general secondary and general elementary credentials, the general school administration credential, the school psychologists’ credential and is certified by the California Board of Medical Examiners as a psychologist.
be announced at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Senate Cham bers, 301 SU.
Nineteen candidates who officially petitioned for office remain in the election. In addition. one student — freshman Mick Mills — has announced himself as a write-in candidate for freshman class president.
Messer explained that write-ins may run for any offices, but that their names must be spelled correctly on ballots.
In other election activities yesterday, Steve Meiers, president of the University Students Party (USP), said no political pressure had been applied to candidates in the elections by his party.
Candidates
Monday three candidates for Freshman Class president dropped from the race in favor of write-in candidate Mills because, they said, they felt political parties were being forced up on them.
Meiers said he contacted two of the students yesterday to ask if they had received pressure from USP.
He said both students said they had not been pressured by any party.
The USP president, commenting on Trojans for Representative Government (TRG) party's announcement yesterday of an open caucus, said his party would protest the elections if TRG came out backing candidates.
He maintained that TRG had lost recognition last semester and could not legitimately enter the campaigns.
Three hundred five outstanding students in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences were named to the Dean’s List for the 1962 spring semester.
Ernestine Lindahl, Susan Hart-j man Beecher Cox, Raymond Judith Jo Luebke Robert
ford McBurney, Linda Lee Me- Charles Cox, Richard A. Cox, James McCarthy, Wendell Je-
Mahan, James Mitchell Mann, T________ T____„
„ ’James Jerome Crisp, William rome McCorvey, Eileen Louise Richard Reade Mayer, Karen
Lorraine Maxwell, Steven Alan|Stephen Croddy- Frank Turner McDonagh, Kenneth Charles
The total is 66 more than the Meiers, Anthony George Merz- Curry. Donald Lee Dear and McKenzie, Raymond Ralph Mo-
previous semester’s 239. Fifty- lak, Robert Maclav Oates Jr., Edwin Moffit DeLaix. Kinley, Patricia Tylene Mo-
three of the 305 listed acquired Adah Gail O’Conner, Judy Lee ... D- - r , Neill, Richard Deffner Macum-
a perfect 4.0 grade point aver- Rees and Mary Elizabeth Rich- ' • .. t -\t i
aeV The lareest number of ards Dixon- Richard Sherwood^ Mlchael James Maloney,
age. me largest numDer or aras. . Stephanie Lou Manong, Mari-
students on the list were from Peggy Elaine Robbins, Carol t Dodge,Harold A. Drake, Mama Mangold Charles C
+K“ Ernest Rydingsword, Edward Gail Drumm, David Carl Dryer, Marson, Lynda ^ Martinez!
Sowers Schweizer, Marjorie Donna Marie Duffy .John Rus-i Gary Michael Mills, Randall
Elaine Shock, Rosemaij The- ^ j>uncan an(j Maurice Dusol Bruce Monsen, Alfredo O. Mo-
the English department.
Moves Forward
“As the University moves forward on its Master Plc*n for rese Smith, Steven Lee Spiegel,
Enterprise and Excellence in;Diane Adell Vedder, Janet Ro- ^r*
Education, we expect our slu- chelle Weiner. Susan R. Winer, j dents to be increasingly chal-1 Rosalie Wolf and Matthew! lenged,” said Dr. Neil D. War-1 Wong.
ren, dean of Letters, Arts and| Those students whqse grade-Sciences. “We congratulate!points fell between 3.5 and 3.9
those whose records show they j made up the remainder of the;5011, Lawrence Raymond Emme,
have met the challenge.” Dean’s List. The following stu- Barbara Dale Epstein, Carol ___
Students named to the list dents were in this category: Ann Erickson and Dariel Abra- Parker RonaW
Wendie Ann Beasley, Suzette! diningrat, Walter Lee Atwell, Q H paul patterson william S.
Bempechat, Ronald Anthony j Burton Herbert Baker and H.
Carter, Sandra Elizabeth Cav-i Dennis Barr.
agnaro, Hedy Kay Davis, Judith Irene Barrett, , classman, Jon David Glass-j Lewis C. Pollanl Jr.
Pamela Glee Dutcher, Barry j Cary Garry, Elaine Beverly |
R-S
Blythe A. Rainey, Betty Jo
Suey Teng Bob Gee, Robert Pine, Peter Linn Plagens. Joseph George. Anthony Mich- James Livingston Plummer and
i , .man, Kenneth Roy Godfrey,
Eben, Joan Ruth Edmonds, Jurii Bastedo, Wayne Richard Beh- Jacque,¡ne ßarbara Q^dberg,
Eenmaa, Robert Bruce Flaigilendorf, Patricia Virginia ^ Gordon
Behnke, John Irven Betinis.j
and William Toshio Futa.
Thelma Jane Gardner. John Stephen Glaser, Donald Steven Greenberg, Michael Alan Gu-hin, Robert Terry Hall, Lawrence Cameron Heiser, Harold
James Robert
Gregory, David Roberts Guil-!
Reading, Robert Ronald Rigg, Dona Perrin Roberts, Mike Von
Robert Lee Bish, Samuel E. , . . ., _ _,
_. . . „ , bert, Arthur Ray Hale and „ _ .. _ .
Bjorklund, Richard Comstock .. Haleblian Robinson. Robin Therese Rob-
Blackbum. Stephen Thomas inson, Terrance Benjamin Rod-
Blume, Gary R. Brooks, David Sharilyn Rae Hanson, Wil- sky. Peter J. Rosen, Susan
Michael Brown, Linda Jeannelliam Henry Harmon, James Marcia Rosenberg, Suzanne
J. Helbock, Russell Donald1 Brown and Margot A. Burgess.! Hedrick Harmon. Harvey E. Beth Rosenstock. Leon Benja-
Hicks, Philip Duane Holmes. C-D Harris, Genta Ann Hawkins, min Roth, Theresa Jurate Rud-
Nelson Thomas Horn, Donna Ruth Louise Caldwell, Judith! Judith Ann Haythrone, Stephen zevicius-Radys and Carolyn F.
Frances Kaiman, Alan David Kashare, Eugene Lee Ketchum and Caesar Sheperd Kersten.
Marilyn Kazuko Kurahashi, Robert John Legebvre, Nancy
Caltech President To Begin Lectures
Rita Calvert, Judith Ann Ca- M. Heilman, Kinniko Higasha, Russell.
pito, Ronald Anthony Carter. Don Scott Holden, David Mii-hael Sacker Setsuko
Joanne T. Casinelli, Laura Anne Fraser Holland. Elena Halle. lf* M^naei sacKer, seuuKo „ _ ' „ .. ! T - TI , . , *.. Helen Sakiyama, Sally B. Salis-
Conaton Barry Lynn Cotter. tx,ra,ne Gay Hnlnback. Uly ^
Maren Jane Courtney, Chap- May Hooper and Nancy Jane wluiam Sche„*. Susan
j Jane Scherer. John Robert Andrew Jackson Hosmer,!Schottland, Stephen Ixwre Lewis Eugene Hoyt, Sandra Schwartz. Victor Stuart Lee Hubbell, Alice Marie Hu-iSchwartz, Gladys Suzanne ber and Kathryn Adele Hughes. * Searle, Nancy May Seid, Toby J K Shalant, Sara Elisabeth Sheiry,
exnioration oro Linda Helen Johnson. Robert Barbara Dorothy Shell, Judie explorât,on ^ Joncs Barbara Ann Sh.ngl.ra».. Jo^ph Shky-
JJoalin. D. Ernest Jung. Arline Joan H«*“« **“ *nd
Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, presi- |U.S. space dent of the California Insti-lgram.
tute of Technology, will open Dr. DuBridge plans to ror-| John Victor Simpson.
relate the connections and sim- Ray Kaplan’ m H* K
a year-iong series of science lectures tonight at 8 in Hancock Auditorium, Dr. John S. Garth, a Hancock Foundation researcher, said yesterday.
Dr. DuBridge will speak on the way the sciences are working together for the present
Philosophical Club To Hold First Meet
The Philosophical Society will hold its first meeting of the semester today at 12:15 in Argonauts Hall in Mudd Hall. Joseph C. Flay, president of the society, announced yesterday.
The group will discuss election of new officers and activities for the semester.
“Membership in the society Js open to all students with an interest in philosophy,” Flay•! said. “There are no dues.’’
Student to Recount India Trip for Killel
The Hillel Foundation will hold an informal lunch today at noon at the foundation. 1029 W. 36th St.
The luncheon will host Arline Kaplan, Daily Trojan as-: sistant feature editor, as guest j speaker.
Miss Kaplan will discuss her adventures in India and other foreign count ires she visted while on an exchange trip to India this summer.
Professor to Read His ‘Last Words’
An engineering professor will read the p*ting statement he
British Teach Conviviality
ilar interests of scientists in the fields of geology, physics, astronomy, chemistry and biol
By PONCHITTA PIERCE Assistant to the Editor (This is the last of a three-part series of articles on the 28 USC students who spent one month at Cambridge University this summer.)
♦ + +
During their month’s stay at Cambridge University, the 28 traveling USC students learned as much about English students as they did about English education.
Whenever possible, they took advantage of opportunities to mix with students, attend their parties and go out with them. They soon discovered that Cambridge men and women, although engulfed in history, are ultramodern.
At parties and in the English homes, students shared the latest jazz sounds, twisted with unrestrained rhythm and got as much “spirit” as possible.
Many of the get-togethers made Trojans forget they were on foreign soil. The English host opened his door, sat down with his guests and spent hours either dancing to or being soothed by the current British favorites—Ray Charles, A1 Hirt, Dave Brubeck, Miles Davis and many others.
The USC students learned that local pubs or teahouses were still the centers for discussing world issues as they were In the 1700s. There was always something on which to throw out ideas— politics, Americanism, World War III, Common Market, Bertand Russell.
A highlight of these sessions were the Americans who are studying at Cambridge during regular terms. After two years of assimilation, most
of them were unrecognizable with their carefully designed beards, quickly acquired English accents and pungent pipes.
From their associations with Cambridge students and their friends, Trojans realized that the English were often more intellectually than socially mature.
An English mother offered one justification.
“In England, dear, we separate the sexes,” she said. “When our students begin secondary education around 11 years of age, the boys go one way and the girls another.”
Many of the schools attest to this—even Cambridge, where there are only three colleges for women but 18 for men.
“Living in” regulations were stiff at Cambridge for both men and women. The latest check in— without a signout—was 11 p.m. for some colleges and midnight for others. On Sundays, students had to be back by 11 p.m.
If a student returned to the gates one minute after they closed, he sometimes had to wait 20 to 30 minutes before the porter finished his “check” and came back to the door.
USC students who visited English homes felt that the parents, once the reserve was broken, were as friendly and congenial as their children, and were more than eager to make their guests feel at home.
By these close associations with the English students, Trojans learned that in many ways the land and sea that separate England from America are not as vast as they appear.
us, Setsuko Virginia Kilhara,j Alexander N. Sloan, Neal Susan Jeanne Kilroy, Sadac Ki- j stuart Smalley, Daniel Joseph
mura, Leonid Kishkovsky, Sue- smith, Michele Claire Smith,
ogy with'the experiments andiEllen Klein- Uana Kleiner Bruce Henry Spector. Joel Irv-
research being done in the John Arthur Kloetzel. Joanne ing standard. Barry Howard
Carol Knemeyer. Michael Alan; Steiner, Virginia Stephens, Jud-Kniss and Deanne Kathleen Ann Still, Lenore J. Strat-Koziol. ‘ton. Herbert G. Steger, Harold
Roger Stokes. Allen Ariel Marguerite Leann Lachman, gtone. Sandra Lee Stuhrman Alan Curtis Lask, Charles Ken-!ancj 3arbara jay Sutton, neth Layne. Stuart Lee, Boydj Sanford Lemon, Leslie Alan I
Leibovitch. Laura Mae Lind-1 James Mounsey Taggart, gren, Karen June Lindstedt, i ^e d Taylor, Michaei Ray David Gordon Lippman. Bar- Thorpe. R. D. Tingom. Tadao bara Jo Login. Vicki Jean Lu-i Tochioka. John Richard Tom-boff and Marvin Arnold Luck- hnson. William C. Tunberg and in (Continued on Page 2)
space program.
Monthly Series
Seven distinguished scientists are slated to appear in the monthly series, scheduled for ¡the second Wednesday of each month. The series will continue through April 10.
! According to Dr. Leslie A. 'Chamber, director of the Hancock Foundation, the lectures are designed to emphasize the interdisciplinary character of ¡modem scientific research.
¡ Following D r. DuBridge’s lecture, Dr. Herman Harvey.
| associate professor of psychology, will speak Nov. 14 on “Psychological Stress and Human Behavior.”
Third Speaker
The third speaker in the series will be Dr. Willard F. Libby, Nobel laureate and professor of chemistry at UCLA. His Dec. 12 lecture will be titled “Isotopic Dating.”
Herbert Friedmann, director of the Los Angeles County Museum, will lecture on “Honey-birds. Wax and Tuberculosis” Oct. 9.
Feb. 13 lecture topic Is “The Living Island: Convergence of Natural Sciences in the Tropi cal Coralline Atoll," by Dr. E. Yale Dawson, professor of biology.
Various other well-known scientists in many different fields also are expected to lecture in this monthly series.
Forum Will Hear Censorship Talk
James Durbin, instructor in a book is injurious to readers’
English, will discuss literary \ minds.
u- He explained that the court
censorship today at 12:05 at
must first determine tne dam-tht first meeting of the gradu- age -Tropic of Cancer” could ate student forum of the Pres- ^ rea(jers' minds before byterian-Episcopal Center, 854 they could determine if the
W. 36th St.
book is obscene.
Durbin, sponsored by Epis- ‘ We know what physical copal Chaplain Michael flamil- harm is, and we can measure ton and Presbyterian Chaplain1 ¡j, for our physical constitn-Charles Doak, will discuss cur- ,tions are similar,” he »aid. rent issues in the censorship! BUt do we know what injures controversy. ¡the mind? Do we feel so inse-
During the ‘Tropic of Can-:cure that we should be dis-cer” obscenity trial last year, turbed by anything that is like-Durbin defended author Henry ly to unsettle us?”
Miller s right to write the book The Rev. Mr. Hamilton said on the grounds that no one all graduate students are in-could determine whether such jvited to attend the discussion.